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  2. Bid–ask spread - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bid–ask_spread

    The bid–ask spread (also bid–offer or bid/ask and buy/sell in the case of a market maker) is the difference between the prices quoted (either by a single market maker or in a limit order book) for an immediate sale and an immediate purchase for stocks, futures contracts, options, or currency pairs in some auction scenario.

  3. Market data - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Market_data

    The market data for a particular instrument would include the identifier of the instrument and where it was traded such as the ticker symbol and exchange code plus the latest bid and ask price and the time of the last trade. It may also include other information such as volume traded, bid, and offer sizes and static data about the financial ...

  4. Order book - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Order_book

    In securities trading, an order book contains the list of buy orders and the list of sell orders. For each entry it must keep among others, some means of identifying the party (even if this identification is obscured, as in a dark pool), the number of securities and the price that the buyer or seller are bidding/asking for the particular security.

  5. Market depth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Market_depth

    Tick size. This refers to the minimum price increment at which trades may be made on the market. The major stock markets in the United States went through a process of decimalisation in April 2001. This switched the minimum increment from a sixteenth to a one hundredth of a dollar. This decision improved market depth. [1]

  6. Technical analysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Technical_analysis

    Open-high-low-close chart – OHLC charts, also known as bar charts, plot the span between the high and low prices of a trading period as a vertical line segment at the trading time, and the open and close prices with horizontal tick marks on the range line, usually a tick to the left for the open price and a tick to the right for the closing ...

  7. Tick size - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tick_size

    Tick sizes can be fixed (e.g., USD 0.0001) or vary according to the current price (common in European markets) with larger increments at higher prices. Heavily-traded stocks are given smaller tick sizes. An instrument price is always a rational number and the tick sizes determine the numbers that are permissible for a given instrument and exchange.

  8. The stock market currently has too rosy an outlook on the Fed's interest rate path, according to Oppenheimer's chief investment strategist John Stoltzfus. Stock market should 'right size ...

  9. Candlestick chart - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Candlestick_chart

    A candlestick chart (also called Japanese candlestick chart or K-line) is a style of financial chart used to describe price movements of a security, derivative, or currency. While similar in appearance to a bar chart, each candlestick represents four important pieces of information for that day: open and close in the thick body, and high and ...